About

Additional Information

Description

Copyright 2017

Dimensions: 7" x 9-1/4"

Pages: 352

Edition: 1st

eBook (Watermarked)

ISBN-10: 0-13-443180-4

ISBN-13: 978-0-13-443180-2

How do successful agile teams deliver bug-free, maintainable software—iteration after iteration? The answer is: By seamlessly combining development and testing. On such teams, the developers write testable code that enables them to verify it using various types of automated tests. This approach keeps regressions at bay and prevents “testing crunches”—which otherwise may occur near the end of an iteration—from ever happening. Writing testable code, however, is often difficult, because it requires knowledge and skills that cut across multiple disciplines.

In Developer Testing, leading test expert and mentor Alexander Tarlinder presents concise, focused guidance for making new and legacy code far more testable. Tarlinder helps you answer questions like: When have I tested this enough? How many tests do I need to write? What should my tests verify? You’ll learn how to design for testability and utilize techniques like refactoring, dependency breaking, unit testing, data-driven testing, and test-driven development to achieve the highest possible confidence in your software. Through practical examples in Java, C#, Groovy, and Ruby, you’ll discover what works—and what doesn’t.

You can quickly begin using Tarlinder’s technology-agnostic insights with most languages and toolsets while not getting buried in specialist details. The author helps you adapt your current programming style for testability, make a testing mindset “second nature,” improve your code, and enrich your day-to-day experience as a software professional. With this guide, you will

Understand the discipline and vocabulary of testing from the developer’s standpoint

Base developer tests on well-established testing techniques and best practices

Recognize code constructs that impact testability

Effectively name, organize, and execute unit tests

Master the essentials of classic and “mockist-style” TDD

Leverage test doubles with or without mocking frameworks

Capture the benefits of programming by contract, even without runtime support for contracts

Take control of dependencies between classes, components, layers, and tiers

Handle combinatorial explosions of test cases, or scenarios requiring many similar tests

Manage code duplication when it can’t be eliminated

Actively maintain and improve your test suites

Perform more advanced tests at the integration, system, and end-to-end levels

Develop an understanding for how the organizational context influences quality assurance